Poverty in Colorado By the Numbers Elizabeth Garner, State Demographer, Department of Local Affairs
Poverty in Colorado By the Numbers
Elizabeth Garner, State Demographer, Department of Local Affairs
Elizabeth Garner [email protected] State Demography Office July 2014 www.colorado.gov/demography
A Picture of Poverty in Colorado
State Demography Office • State Agency
• Responsible for population data needed by state agencies.
• Department of Local Affairs • Prepares data and information in ways that account for
local perspectives, needs. • Public Information
• Makes data and information readily available to the public, including citizens, businesses and non-profit agencies.
• Outreach • Work with local governments and others to understand
what the numbers are saying
Outline • Define poverty • Compared to data on livable wage and industry wages. • Trends in Poverty • Poverty by Characteristic
• Age • Employment Status • Educational attainment • Household type and size
What is Poverty – US Poverty Thresholds
$11.46/hr
US Dept of Health and Human Services, 2014
Self Sufficiency Standard vs. Poverty
$58,561 or $27.72/hr or
$13.86 /hr each adult
Colorado Center on Law and Policy,
CO Dept of Labor and Employment
Occupational Wage Outlook
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
4
Census ACS 2012
Census ACS 2012
Colorado vs US Individual Poverty Rate 1995 - 2012
Source: Census, SAIPE
Colorado
U.S.
In 2012 13.5% vs 16%
• Real Median Household Income has fallen 2000-12 • Colorado – 7.6% • US - 5.6%
Census SAIPE
What Could Be Causing Growth In Poverty • Job Loss – income loss
• Increase in unemployed • Increase in part time or marginally attached. • Wages – • Age – what age groups performed well – or not • Education – what educational groups performed well – or not
• Drop out of the labor force • Age out • Opt out – something better to do.
• Education • Caregiver
• Household Composition • Number of earners • Marital Status • Number of kids
Colo Dept of Labor and Employment
Employment by Industry Changes 2007-2013Difference 2013 - Trough
2013 Jobs Relative to Pre Recession Peak
Agriculture 5,146 3,090 Oil & Gas / Mining 6,489 1,931 Utilities -377 (574) Construction 14,841 (45,573) Manufacturing 8,015 (16,537) Wholesale Trade 6,468 (3,781) Retail Trade 14,440 (7,792) Transport & Warehousing 6,579 (2,137) Information -1,121 (7,513) Finance 6,705 (5,844) Real Estate 3,583 (5,535) Prof. Business Services 25,245 17,081 Mgmt of Companies 5,970 5,504 Administration 19,008 4,572 Education Services 6,936 5,014 Health Services 32,389 19,488 Arts 5,235 4,085 Accomodation & Food 24,187 13,723 Other Services 11,507 5,698 Government 28,817 11,577
State Demography Office, 2013
Source: State Demography Office, CO Department of Labor
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics 2011 Annual Average
Labor Force 16-34 is 35%
of the labor force yet 50%
of the unemployed
Census 2000 and ACS 2010
Census 2000 and ACS 2010
Unemployment Rate by Education, 2011 Bureau of Labor Statistics
Census 2000 and ACS 2010
Census 2000 and ACS 2010
Household Change And Poverty • Household size is declining. • Number of earners per household declined from 2008-
2012 • Especially for the under 25 year old household.
• Between 2005 and 2011 - The number of households with children under 18 who had at least one unemployed parent rose by 33 percent for US. Colorado Increase was 56% - 6th highest in US.
Between 2000-2010 - Both parents living together fell from 75% to 72% - Female headed grew by 25% - All households grew by 16%
Source: Census 2000, ACS 2010
Future Household Income is Demographically Challenged
• Demographic • Household type and size • Age • Race/ethnicity
• Educational attainment • Household Income
• Youth Un and Under Employment
Census 2010
White Non Hispanic is the difference between the share shown and 100%. For example White Non-
Hispanic is 58% of the Less than 5 Age Group.
Census ACS 2012
State Demography Office
Where to Go From Here Poverty Can Be Complicated – Think in Terms of Income • Poverty/Income is driven by many factors – for example
• Full Time Work • Education Attainment (HS+) • Marital Status • Age and marital status of first child and number of children
• Full time employment is key factor to improve incomes • Age – 18 - 24 (many enrolled), 25 – 34 (bigger concern) • Educational attainment
• Race/Ethnicity Differentials • Household Income
• Low wage jobs – no wage growth at the lowest levels • Not all industries have recovered – construction, retail. • Paths to wage improvement
Thank you
State Demography Office Department of Local Affairs
Elizabeth Garner [email protected]
303-864-7750 www.colorado.gov/demography
Source: Census 2000, 2010
Labor Force (civilian, non-institutional, 16+, actively working or looking for work)
Cyclical
• Employed • Unemployed
Other Issues
• Data reliability • Small Sample Size
• 855 Households • 6,800 Work sites
Structural
• Age • Labor force participation
rates.
Percentage point change of 65+ share of population, 2010 - 2030
Source: State Demography Office
Colorado
Tackling Poverty Together Goal: Develop two or three action items that the CWDC can achieve on this subject within the next 60 days. Action items should be specific, measureable and attainable. More discussion is needed. For this reason, we ask that you break out into smaller groups of 8 - 10 and as a group, address the five following questions.
Tackling Poverty Together 1. Is there a role for the CWDC to address the issue of poverty? Yes or No
2. If yes, how do you see the role of the CWDC in addressing this very broad and
complex issue?
3. How do you see the CWDC integrating and addressing poverty into existing CWDC initiatives?
4. What overall goal and/or specific issues would you most like to see the CWDC address when it comes to poverty?
5. Please put together one or two specific action items that the local regions and state agencies could achieve within the next 60 days.